i hope am not too late.in the cycle a co2 is added to 5C compound the RUBPwhich forms a 6C unstable compound which goes on to form a 3 C stable compound called GP.this further forms another 3C the triose phosphate using ATP and reduced NADP which is a Hydrogen provided made in the light dependant stages. this triose.... goes on to form glucose, aminoacids and lipids or RUBP.

jwalin wrote:i hope am not too late.in the cycle a co2 is added to 5C compound the RUBPwhich forms a 6C unstable compound which goes on to form a 3 C stable compound called GP.this further forms another 3C the triose phosphate using ATP and reduced NADP which is a Hydrogen provided made in the light dependant stages. this triose.... goes on to form glucose, aminoacids and lipids or RUBP.

First, quite interesting name name for a compound - GP, isn't it? NADPH is actually electron provided and made blablabla, not hydrogen And last, but not least this triose called glyceraldehyde phosphate is primarily recycled, that's why is it called The Calvin CYCLE and why it can work all the time Just a minor part is transformed to hexose (primarily fructose), the rest has nothing to do with the Calvin cycle

to Jackbean anotherr thing RUBP is recyced isn't it ?? i thought and so my text also says the same. and hhence it's called the calvin cycle.about the last part i.e. " just minor.....calvin cycle" i have not studied that yet just in the 12th you kn ow. thank you for telling me only a minor part is used in the ccycle.

My point wasn't provided/provider, because you wrote it corectly, that it is provided by the "light" reaction, my point was, that it is electron, not hydrogen, what is provided The hydrogen is there just to keep it electroneutral Yes, RuBP is recycled, as well as PGAL is recycled (just by another part of the cycle ). I wrote it bad, it was supposed to be "is used for recycling" About the last part - you got me wrong again I wrote, that most of it is recycled and only minor part is used for formation of hexose and the other stuff

This reply won't make it simpler for you to understand the Calvin cycle. The Calvin cycle, or the carbon cycle in photosynthesis, actually does not exist in photosynthesis, according to the findings of Melvin Calvin and his co-workers at Berkeley and Francis K. Fong et al at Purdue and NSFfunding dot com, published in the permanent literature. The Calvin cycle dates back to the publication of a single news item, Chem. & Eng. News, 33, 2809 (July 4, 1955), contrary to the entire body of published results in reputable research journals from 1900 to the present. It is the current topic for governmental investigation involving the National Science Foundation and its Office of Inspector General. For the latest development in this investigation, please visit NSFfunding dot com's webpage.